Malcom X.

blake kathryn
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trying on a metaphor

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#extradirty

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KIROKAZE
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โฃ Chile in a Photography โฃ
I'd rather be in outer space ๐ธ
art blog(derogatory)

oozey mess
Aqua Utopia๏ฝๆตทใฎๅบใง่จๆถใ็ดกใ
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Discoholic ๐ชฉ
Game of Thrones Daily
h

romaโ
cherry valley forever
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@spectral-unicorndinosaur8
Malcom X.
Blue & Red.
Happy Sakura season. ๐ธ๐ธ๐ธ๐๐๐๐ธ
The idealized and romantised version of a samurai.
An American broadcaster
Sadie in 1918
Jan.2.1898-Nov.1.1989 (Aged 91)
Cause of death: Pneumonia.
Parents: Aaron Albert Mossell the second (Father) & Mary Louisa Tanner (mother).
Education: Penn Carey Law (1927), University of Pennsylvania (1918), Dunbar High School.
Spouses: Raymond Pace (1923-1974).
Children: Mary Elizabeth Alexander Brown & a second child.
The first Black/African-American woman to earn a PhD in economics.
She served on the board of the National Urban League for 25 years.
U.S. President Jimmy Carter named her in 1979 to chair the decennial White House Conference on Aging, an appointment later withdrawn by Richard Schweiker, President Ronald Reagan's Secretary of Health and Human Services.
Mossell had attended high school in Washington, D.C. at the M Street School, now known as Dunbar High School, graduating in 1915. She was able to do so because she stayed with her uncle Dr. Lewis Baxter Moore and step aunt at their home on the campus of Howard University.
Mossell returned to Philadelphia to study at the School of Education at the University of Pennsylvania, graduating in 1918. There, she faced numerous hardships, due to her race and gender, such as poor advising, false accusations of plagiarism, and other students stealing her intellectual property.
Mossell Alexander died on November 1, 1989, at Cathedral Village in Andorra, Philadelphia, from pneumonia as a complication from Alzheimer's disease.
Dr. Rebecca Lee Crumpler, a trailblazer and the first black female doctor.
Jane Matilda Bolin was a American attorney & judge. She was the first black woman to graduate from Yale law school, the first to join the New York City Bar Association, and the first to join the New York City Law Department.
Ms. Bolin became the first black woman to serve as a judge in the United States when she was sworn into the bench of the New York City Domestic Relations Court in 1939.